Rowan University Rowan Digital Works Cooper Medical School of Rowan University Capstone Projects Cooper Medical School of Rowan University 2018 The Trials and Triumphs of the American Polio Vaccine Dayna Hovern Follow this and additional works at: https://rdw.rowan.edu/cmsru_capstones Recommended Citation Hovern, Dayna, "The Trials and Triumphs of the American Polio Vaccine" (2018). Cooper Medical School of Rowan University Capstone Projects. 4. https://rdw.rowan.edu/cmsru_capstones/4 This Research Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the Cooper Medical School of Rowan University at Rowan Digital Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Cooper Medical School of Rowan University Capstone Projects by an authorized administrator of Rowan Digital Works. Introduction: Vaccination is one of mankind’s most influential scientific advances. It is only the past couple hundreds of years that humans have been able to thwart the illnesses that have plagued our population since the beginning of human existence. In the 14th century the Black Plague is responsive for killing millions people; over 50% of European population at the time.1 In the colonial era, small pox was killing most children less than 10 years old or leaving the survivors disfigured.2 With the developmental advances in immunology, the discovery of vaccines is responsible for saving millions of lives and pushing back the illnesses that used to spur so much fear, into the shadows. Today’s generations will never know a person who perished from tuberculosis or have a classmate crippled by poliomyelitis. This is a fact for which the human race should be eternally grateful. There was a time that parents were so terrorized by these illnesses that they would volunteer their children for experimental treatment, a time where countless prayers were said to beg for a cure or to plead to a greater power to spare your family from harm. This fear has enormous power. It can drive a society into madness- the aftermath of the AIDS epidemic is still evident today with the stigmatization of HIV+ individuals- or it can unity a community against a common enemy. The story of the development of the polio vaccination is a tale of dread, scientific endeavor, trials, and triumph. It is a story about how fear was harnessed to fuel the greatest scientific experiment in American history and a story of how man rid the earth of a frightening, child paralyzing, microscopic monster. 1 Oshinsky, David M. Polio: An American story. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. 8 2 Ibid. The History of Poliomyelitis The disease we know as poliomyelitis has been terrorizing humans for thousands of years. Archeologist have unearthed Ancient Egyptian paintings and carvings that depict healthy adults with withered limbs. There are of paintings of Ancient Egyptian children using canes to walk.3 The earliest example is depicted on a freestanding stone tablet, believed to be from 1500 BC. On the tablet, there is a carving of a man, whom archeologist believe to have been a priest based on his wardrobe, with a withered right leg who is using a cane to support his weight.4 Throughout early human history, poliomyelitis was a disease that primary affected individuals, not a population. The disease most often effected children and therefore was referred to as infantile paralysis. Some of the most famous, ancient physicians in Europe, including Hippocrates, wrote about deformities that are indicative of poliomyelitis. The name polio itself comes from the word poliomyelitis, which is a combination of Greek words; “polios” meaning gray and “myelos” meaning marrow in addition to the Latin suffix “-itis” which means inflammation. Progressing forward in time, there are sporadic references to paralyzed children in the Middle Ages and more detailed historical accounts come from the 17th and 18th centuries.5 In the mid 1800s, small population of infantile paralysis cases were speckled around Western Europe and the United States of America. In the summer of 1894, the first American polio epidemic was record was in Otter Valley, Vermont. In total, 123 children were affected. A meticulous and observant family physician named Charles Caverly carefully recorded information about each case and discovered public health trends about polio that would be useful for future outbreaks. He noted that the majority of polio victims were male and under 6 years 3 Oshinsky, David M. Polio: An American story. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.10. 4 Ibid. 5 Oshinsky, David M. Polio: An American story. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.8-11. old. He also observed that most of the cases occurred in the summer and began the same way, with a headache, fever, nausea, fatigue, and a stiff neck. These vague signs could be interpreted as simply a bad case of the flu, but in reality, there was something more sinister happening to these young people.6 In 1916, a quickly growing epidemic of weakness in young children in a section of Brooklyn caught the attention of the Health Department. Pigtown, the area affected, was known for being a heavily populated immigrant community. Local newspapers at the time interviewed frightened Italian parents who reported that their children where too weak to hold a bottle or that their “legs seemed limp”. The Health Department sent dozens of investigators to Pigtown to conduct door-to-door inspections. Polio was found to be accountable.7 Up until the late 18th century, New York had a higher mortality rate than other comparable metropolises like Paris, London, Boston, and Philadelphia. It is estimated that 20 percent of New York babies died before their first birthday and of those that did survive, 25 percent of them would die before adulthood. The polio epidemic of 1916 was of immense significance. It is estimated that New York City had 8,900 cases and 2,400 deaths from polio. Of those reported cases 80 percent were children under five years old.8 Public health officials and federal authorities took desperate measures to contain the epidemic. They declared quarantines, banned public gatherings, killed up to 450 domestic cats and dogs every day, and dowsed the streets with 4 million gallons of water in an effort to abate the disease.9 But their efforts were 6 Oshinsky, David M. Polio: An American story. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.11-13. 7 Oshinsky, David M. Polio: An American story. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.19-21. 8 Ibid. 9 Offit, Paul A. The Cutter incident: how Americas first polio vaccine led to the growing vaccine crisis. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007. 6. null. The epidemic quickly outgrew New York, lasted from July to October, and claimed 27,000 lives in the United States. At its peak, a child died from polio every twenty-six minutes.10 While the significant impact of the 1916 epidemic may have been overshadowed by World War I, medical researchers at the time were asking the pertinent questions: how does polio spread? How can we stop it? Unlike other infectious epidemics, it seems that polio did not respond to the typical public health measures of quarantine and sanitation. Polio was different.11 While scientific curiosities about polio where challenging the nation’s brightest minds, the public could not afford to wait for the mysteries of polio to be solved as their children withered and died. At the time, there were multiple theories about what caused polio. The community blamed fish, rats, cats, horses, mosquitos, chickens, shark vapors, pasteurized milk, wireless electricity, radio waves, tobacco smoke, automobile exhaust, the beards of doctors, and poisonous gases permeating from Europe. They blamed tarantulas for injecting their salivary poisons into bananas. They blamed parents for ticking their children. They blamed immigrant populations and they blamed the will of God. Desperate and scared, residents tried everything to prevent the illness. They ate catnip, skullcap, lady’s slipper, earthworm oils, blackberry brandy, and the blood of animals. People hung charms around their necks of garlic, pepper, camphor, and onions. Charlatans enticed terrified parents with potions of sassafras and alcohol or magic wood 10 Offit, Paul A. The Cutter incident: how Americas first polio vaccine led to the growing vaccine crisis. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007. 8. 11 Offit, Paul A. The Cutter incident: how Americas first polio vaccine led to the growing vaccine crisis. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007.10. chips, promising protection and cure from poliomyelitis.12 Despite these measures, no one was safe from the reach of polio as it did not discriminate against gender, age, race, or religion. Poliomyelitis is a virus that can take up residence in the anterior horn of the spinal cord and cause paralysis. It is an enteric infection, that is spread among individuals due to contact with fecal waste. Polio enters the body through the mouth and is ultimately excreted in stool. Replication of the virus occurs primary in the small intestine, but can also occur at various points throughout the body, including the lymph nodes that are along the digestive tract. Once the virus is absorbed into the bloodstream it travels to the spinal cord where it damages motor neurons, the nerves that communicate to the muscles, inducing paralysis. Most deaths that occur due to poliomyelitis occur when the paralysis involves the diaphragm and other breathing muscles.13 While paralysis is the most feared symptom of poliomyelitis it only occurs in about one in a hundred cases. Most often, polio infected individuals experience a minor illness with minimal discomfort. A short course of headache, nausea, and malaise are common and then the individual acquires protective immunity. But about 1 percent of people infected with poliomyelitis end up with an illness that causes variable paralysis.14 It is this drastic symptom that society and parents feared the most.
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